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Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1974-02-28

Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1974-02-28, page 01

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OfflQJEWfi«#)TOQMCLE
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LIBRAHY, OHIO" HISTORICAL SOO|£TY
1982 VELMa AVE.
OOLS. 0. 43211 EXOH
VOL. 52 NO. 9
FEBRUARY 28, 1974 - ADAR 6
FROM THE SUEZ CANAL FRONT (WNS) - Israel troops completed their pullout from the west bank-of the Suez Canal with soldiers carrying such signs as "Goodbye Africa" and "Our Leaving Egypt is a Hope for Peace." A crack brigade of paratroopers, the first
. Israelis to cross the canal westward in October heard their commander recall the event of 129 days earlier
\ and tell them "we fold our flag here with a desire and a hope for peace."
WASHINGTON (WNS) — Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger is scheduled to make another trip to the Middle East in an effort to establish disengagement talks between Israel and Syria. The announcement was made by President Nixon in the presence of Kissinger and Foreign Ministers Ismail Fahmy of Egypt and Omar Saquaf of Saudi Arabia. Nixon said the talks with the two Arabs covered "mutual problems: regarding a permanent settlement" in the Middle East and "normal relations, economic and otherwise, with countries of that part of the world." WASHINGTON (WNS) -.Rep. Clarence D. Long (D. Md.), a leading member of several Congressional economic committees^has copipiled data showing the 11 Arab countries that joined in the Yom Kippur War against Israel received $8,952 billion in assistance from the U.S. government and American oil companies in the six years before the conflict. Long said this was almost two and a half times the estimated $3.7 billion in military find economic aid the Soviet Union gave the
' Arab states and more than four times the U.S. government's credits and gifts of $2.2 billion tb Israel •in the U.S. fiscal years 1968-73. However, Long believes his estimates of Soviet military ai(i"is probably low"
- since te tffied ;flgufes for1868-71 and Soviet; arms^ supplies "increased substantially in 1972 and 1973 as' the Arabs prepared for the October 1973 war." A"
Urge Gasoline, Oil Regulated As Public Utility; Step-Up Development Oi Coal, Nuclear Energy
NEW YORK, - A leading American rabbi urged;last week that -gasoline and heating oil be "taken off the free market and regulated as a public utility", while a Nobel economist said the nation's energy; problems had been intensified by. "past policies of protecting the domestic oil industry through import quotas."
Rabbi Arthur J. Lelyveld of Cleveland charged that an "oil producer cartel" lay at the root of the country's energy crisis. Professor '
Kenneth J. Arrow of Har¬ vard, president of the American \ Economic Association and 1972 Nobel laureate in \ economic science, urged ' stepped-up development of; coal and nuclear energy as, "long-run solutions.". \
\ They addressed a lun¬ cheon of the American Jfewish Congress national convention in the Roosevelt Hotel.
Rabbi Lelyveld, im¬ mediate past president of the Congress and rabbi of the
Fairmount Temple in Shaker Heights, declared: "The sequel to Watergate is Oilgate - an amalgam of profiteering producers, both foreign and domestic, and a government that in the' face of reliable forecasts of an energy shortage was apathetic, inept or worse. ' "American Jews are not directly involved as a- community in the energy shortage. But for those who take the prophetic tradition seriously, there is a moral involvement we cannot
shirk.
"To let prices rise upward as supply decreases is to put a heavy penalty op the American, laborer and the American poor, while the rjch continue to ride in comfort. \ -
"One affluent individual in Ohio, obscenely interested in his own welfare, recently bought a service station and filled its tanks for his own private use,
"But motor fuel and heating fuel are not
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 11)
Yael Dayan To Appear In Columbus For UJF Women
Pulitzer Prize Winner Will Speak At OSU Hillel
Stuart H. Loory will speak at a brunch for the Kosher Co-op on Sunday, March 3 at 12 noon. Mr. Loory is a Pulitzer prize winner and is currently the Executive News Director of WNBC-TV in New York City. In the past, Mr. Loory has been a White House correspondent, • Science writer for the New York Times, Moscow bureau chief for the New York Herald Tribune, and a Woodrow Wilson In¬ ternational Scholar.
Mr. Loory has been the recipient of numerous awards and has lectured at universities, press association meetings, ser¬ vice clubs, and high schools. He has appeared on Face the Nation, The Today Show, CBS News A and other programs televised locally in Chicago and Lbs Angeles. The topic of Mr. Loory's
STUART H. LOORY
discussion at the brunch will be his recent book, Inside America's Military Machine. The cost of the meal and presentation will be $2.00 or $1.00 with Hillel Activity card. The discussion will take place at 46 East 16th Avenue in the
(CONTINUED ON PivSE U)
With the theme "Guess Who Is Coining To Colum¬ bus" the Women's and Young Matrons Divisions of the United Jewish Fund Campaign have sent out 2,500 invitations to all the Jewish Women in Cplumbus; to meet and hear one df i.4sr^l'&^tstandirigJ per--' ' sonalities ->YaeL;DayahAvV A -: Visiting the; United States for; ■ a brief speaking engagement, Mrs. Milton M. Parker, Chairman of the Women's Division and Mrs. Alan Wasserstrom, Chairman of the Young Matrons' : Division feel privileged that Columbus, Ohio has been selected by Yael Dayan to appear at a Communitywide gathering on Monday afternoon, March 11, 1974 at 1 p.m. in the Sanctuary of Temple Israel.. "Hie charge of $1.50 per person will cover the cost of - the reception which will be held in the Social Hall later. Ms. Dayan is the; author of several novels * and is the daughter of the famed General Moshe Dayan, Israel's Commander-in- Chief of the Army and Minister of Agriculture. She is a Sabra (native) born in Nahalal, a village near Haifa. Both her paternal and maternal grandparents have been intimately bound\ up with the founding and. development of modern Israel. Her mother, Ruth Dayan, is the head of Maskity
Israel's celebrated village of crafts and industry.
Yael Dayan has studied political science at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and -has worked as a Journalist for the "Jewish1 Press and the British j^pidcastittg' tbrpbratioii^ r traveling extensively in "Europe,, South America, Asia apd ttitf Uhited, Slatefi. , ;She enlisted in the terael Army six months before her conscription was due and after basic training she entered Officer's Training School at the age of seven¬ teen,rto become < a sub¬ lieutenant training recruits.
Mrs. Walter Robinson, €hairmanof the "Day with Dayan" said, "Yael Dayan is considered a dynamic speaker whose personal experiences and capabilities
will make the afternoon a never to be forgotten op¬ portunity for every Jewish Woman to learn the latest about Israel, the effect of the "disengagement" and What the future may hold for Israel. Ms. Dayan will bring vital information about the
Holocaust Authority Calls Passivity To Nazis A Myth
. by Bill Cohen . Chronicle Special Reporter
History, books which portray European Jews walking into Nazi ovens without a fight are hot as accurate as we may once have thought, according to Yehuda Bauer, Professor of the Holocaust at Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
Bauer was in Columbus last week during a visit
; sponsored by the Columbus
1 Jewish Federation.
Bauer told The Chronicle that books written up to six; or seven years ago on the holocaust;, were (;"quite misleading," rtioaUy ignoring Jewish violent and non-violent resistance to the Nazis. ' , -'!
"There were in the central part of Poland 28 armed Jewish resistance units, and
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 14)
current situation in the country and how supportive American Jewry is of the State of Israel."
To help with the initial plans for the afternoon the following women have been Chosen committee chair¬ men: Hostesses'. Mrs. Jack Resler" and Mrs. Jerry L. Kroos; Hospitality: Mrs. Ronald Blank; Registration, Mrs. Herman L. Lieverman; Invitations: Mrs. Neil Moss; and Arrangements: Mrs. Sidney Putchat, Additional committee appointments will be announced next week.
"More than 2,500 in¬ vitations have been mailed.. If for any reason anyone has not received hers," said Mrs. Parker, "she is more than welcome to attend, as everyone is invited. Kindly call the office at 237-7686 and indicate you plan to come. We do ask that those who received an invitation, kindly return the enclosed reservation card with their check for $1.50 per person."
"The Young Matrons are actively involved in all levels of planning for' this momentous occasion," said Mrs. Alan Wasserstrom. "We look forward to seeing all of our young women at Temple Israel oh Monday afternoon, March 11. If anyone wishes to participate on any committee, please call me. We will be happy to include her."
Solzhenitsyn, Soviet Jewry^ U.S. —Soviet Detente
By Murray Zuckoff, JTA News Editor
NEW YORK, (JTA) - The deportation of Alexander Solzhenitsyn bodes ill for the future, of Soviet Jews campaigning for the right to emigrate. We arrest and ^pulsion ; of.. J.he, Nobel'
Laureate was the climax of a fierce campaign against him sparked by his latest book, "Ttie Gulag Archipelago," which deals with the Soviet prison camps and Stalin's plot to exterminate Soviet Jewry., According to' an announcement by Tass, the Presidium of the. USSR
supreme Soviet stripped Solzhenitsyn of his citizenship "for performing systematically actions that are incompatible with being a citizen, of the USSR and detrimental to the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics." On Feb. 15, two days after the expulsion, there was an
announcement in Washington that a group of Soviet officials will be Visiting various cities in the United States as guests of leading business executives. This visit, arranged after .Soviet Communist Party leader Leonid Brezhnev was here last June, is.an effort to
win community support for expanding commercial deals between the two nations as a means of pump-priming their economies. (The 20- member delegation headed by Soviet Foreign Trade Minister Nikolai Patolichev was scheduled to arrive in New York! Feb. 24, and, go
directly to Washington for a meeting of the Soviet- American Trade Council on Feb. 26. Afterwards each member will be ac¬ companied to a specific community by his American business host.) The ex¬ pulsion and visit, seemingly
• (CONTINUED ON. PAGE », •, , .
iA

■ * '^•■,V> .■'/>■ '«i£T
■.itii.iir.-Jf t'.kwM
#
OfflQJEWfi«#)TOQMCLE
z}j\//Serving Columbus and Central Ohio Jewish Community for Over 50 Years \J[\\
LIBRAHY, OHIO" HISTORICAL SOO|£TY
1982 VELMa AVE.
OOLS. 0. 43211 EXOH
VOL. 52 NO. 9
FEBRUARY 28, 1974 - ADAR 6
FROM THE SUEZ CANAL FRONT (WNS) - Israel troops completed their pullout from the west bank-of the Suez Canal with soldiers carrying such signs as "Goodbye Africa" and "Our Leaving Egypt is a Hope for Peace." A crack brigade of paratroopers, the first
. Israelis to cross the canal westward in October heard their commander recall the event of 129 days earlier
\ and tell them "we fold our flag here with a desire and a hope for peace."
WASHINGTON (WNS) — Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger is scheduled to make another trip to the Middle East in an effort to establish disengagement talks between Israel and Syria. The announcement was made by President Nixon in the presence of Kissinger and Foreign Ministers Ismail Fahmy of Egypt and Omar Saquaf of Saudi Arabia. Nixon said the talks with the two Arabs covered "mutual problems: regarding a permanent settlement" in the Middle East and "normal relations, economic and otherwise, with countries of that part of the world." WASHINGTON (WNS) -.Rep. Clarence D. Long (D. Md.), a leading member of several Congressional economic committees^has copipiled data showing the 11 Arab countries that joined in the Yom Kippur War against Israel received $8,952 billion in assistance from the U.S. government and American oil companies in the six years before the conflict. Long said this was almost two and a half times the estimated $3.7 billion in military find economic aid the Soviet Union gave the
' Arab states and more than four times the U.S. government's credits and gifts of $2.2 billion tb Israel •in the U.S. fiscal years 1968-73. However, Long believes his estimates of Soviet military ai(i"is probably low"
- since te tffied ;flgufes for1868-71 and Soviet; arms^ supplies "increased substantially in 1972 and 1973 as' the Arabs prepared for the October 1973 war." A"
Urge Gasoline, Oil Regulated As Public Utility; Step-Up Development Oi Coal, Nuclear Energy
NEW YORK, - A leading American rabbi urged;last week that -gasoline and heating oil be "taken off the free market and regulated as a public utility", while a Nobel economist said the nation's energy; problems had been intensified by. "past policies of protecting the domestic oil industry through import quotas."
Rabbi Arthur J. Lelyveld of Cleveland charged that an "oil producer cartel" lay at the root of the country's energy crisis. Professor '
Kenneth J. Arrow of Har¬ vard, president of the American \ Economic Association and 1972 Nobel laureate in \ economic science, urged ' stepped-up development of; coal and nuclear energy as, "long-run solutions.". \
\ They addressed a lun¬ cheon of the American Jfewish Congress national convention in the Roosevelt Hotel.
Rabbi Lelyveld, im¬ mediate past president of the Congress and rabbi of the
Fairmount Temple in Shaker Heights, declared: "The sequel to Watergate is Oilgate - an amalgam of profiteering producers, both foreign and domestic, and a government that in the' face of reliable forecasts of an energy shortage was apathetic, inept or worse. ' "American Jews are not directly involved as a- community in the energy shortage. But for those who take the prophetic tradition seriously, there is a moral involvement we cannot
shirk.
"To let prices rise upward as supply decreases is to put a heavy penalty op the American, laborer and the American poor, while the rjch continue to ride in comfort. \ -
"One affluent individual in Ohio, obscenely interested in his own welfare, recently bought a service station and filled its tanks for his own private use,
"But motor fuel and heating fuel are not
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 11)
Yael Dayan To Appear In Columbus For UJF Women
Pulitzer Prize Winner Will Speak At OSU Hillel
Stuart H. Loory will speak at a brunch for the Kosher Co-op on Sunday, March 3 at 12 noon. Mr. Loory is a Pulitzer prize winner and is currently the Executive News Director of WNBC-TV in New York City. In the past, Mr. Loory has been a White House correspondent, • Science writer for the New York Times, Moscow bureau chief for the New York Herald Tribune, and a Woodrow Wilson In¬ ternational Scholar.
Mr. Loory has been the recipient of numerous awards and has lectured at universities, press association meetings, ser¬ vice clubs, and high schools. He has appeared on Face the Nation, The Today Show, CBS News A and other programs televised locally in Chicago and Lbs Angeles. The topic of Mr. Loory's
STUART H. LOORY
discussion at the brunch will be his recent book, Inside America's Military Machine. The cost of the meal and presentation will be $2.00 or $1.00 with Hillel Activity card. The discussion will take place at 46 East 16th Avenue in the
(CONTINUED ON PivSE U)
With the theme "Guess Who Is Coining To Colum¬ bus" the Women's and Young Matrons Divisions of the United Jewish Fund Campaign have sent out 2,500 invitations to all the Jewish Women in Cplumbus; to meet and hear one df i.4sr^l'&^tstandirigJ per--' ' sonalities ->YaeL;DayahAvV A -: Visiting the; United States for; ■ a brief speaking engagement, Mrs. Milton M. Parker, Chairman of the Women's Division and Mrs. Alan Wasserstrom, Chairman of the Young Matrons' : Division feel privileged that Columbus, Ohio has been selected by Yael Dayan to appear at a Communitywide gathering on Monday afternoon, March 11, 1974 at 1 p.m. in the Sanctuary of Temple Israel.. "Hie charge of $1.50 per person will cover the cost of - the reception which will be held in the Social Hall later. Ms. Dayan is the; author of several novels * and is the daughter of the famed General Moshe Dayan, Israel's Commander-in- Chief of the Army and Minister of Agriculture. She is a Sabra (native) born in Nahalal, a village near Haifa. Both her paternal and maternal grandparents have been intimately bound\ up with the founding and. development of modern Israel. Her mother, Ruth Dayan, is the head of Maskity
Israel's celebrated village of crafts and industry.
Yael Dayan has studied political science at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and -has worked as a Journalist for the "Jewish1 Press and the British j^pidcastittg' tbrpbratioii^ r traveling extensively in "Europe,, South America, Asia apd ttitf Uhited, Slatefi. , ;She enlisted in the terael Army six months before her conscription was due and after basic training she entered Officer's Training School at the age of seven¬ teen,rto become < a sub¬ lieutenant training recruits.
Mrs. Walter Robinson, €hairmanof the "Day with Dayan" said, "Yael Dayan is considered a dynamic speaker whose personal experiences and capabilities
will make the afternoon a never to be forgotten op¬ portunity for every Jewish Woman to learn the latest about Israel, the effect of the "disengagement" and What the future may hold for Israel. Ms. Dayan will bring vital information about the
Holocaust Authority Calls Passivity To Nazis A Myth
. by Bill Cohen . Chronicle Special Reporter
History, books which portray European Jews walking into Nazi ovens without a fight are hot as accurate as we may once have thought, according to Yehuda Bauer, Professor of the Holocaust at Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
Bauer was in Columbus last week during a visit
; sponsored by the Columbus
1 Jewish Federation.
Bauer told The Chronicle that books written up to six; or seven years ago on the holocaust;, were (;"quite misleading," rtioaUy ignoring Jewish violent and non-violent resistance to the Nazis. ' , -'!
"There were in the central part of Poland 28 armed Jewish resistance units, and
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 14)
current situation in the country and how supportive American Jewry is of the State of Israel."
To help with the initial plans for the afternoon the following women have been Chosen committee chair¬ men: Hostesses'. Mrs. Jack Resler" and Mrs. Jerry L. Kroos; Hospitality: Mrs. Ronald Blank; Registration, Mrs. Herman L. Lieverman; Invitations: Mrs. Neil Moss; and Arrangements: Mrs. Sidney Putchat, Additional committee appointments will be announced next week.
"More than 2,500 in¬ vitations have been mailed.. If for any reason anyone has not received hers," said Mrs. Parker, "she is more than welcome to attend, as everyone is invited. Kindly call the office at 237-7686 and indicate you plan to come. We do ask that those who received an invitation, kindly return the enclosed reservation card with their check for $1.50 per person."
"The Young Matrons are actively involved in all levels of planning for' this momentous occasion," said Mrs. Alan Wasserstrom. "We look forward to seeing all of our young women at Temple Israel oh Monday afternoon, March 11. If anyone wishes to participate on any committee, please call me. We will be happy to include her."
Solzhenitsyn, Soviet Jewry^ U.S. —Soviet Detente
By Murray Zuckoff, JTA News Editor
NEW YORK, (JTA) - The deportation of Alexander Solzhenitsyn bodes ill for the future, of Soviet Jews campaigning for the right to emigrate. We arrest and ^pulsion ; of.. J.he, Nobel'
Laureate was the climax of a fierce campaign against him sparked by his latest book, "Ttie Gulag Archipelago," which deals with the Soviet prison camps and Stalin's plot to exterminate Soviet Jewry., According to' an announcement by Tass, the Presidium of the. USSR
supreme Soviet stripped Solzhenitsyn of his citizenship "for performing systematically actions that are incompatible with being a citizen, of the USSR and detrimental to the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics." On Feb. 15, two days after the expulsion, there was an
announcement in Washington that a group of Soviet officials will be Visiting various cities in the United States as guests of leading business executives. This visit, arranged after .Soviet Communist Party leader Leonid Brezhnev was here last June, is.an effort to
win community support for expanding commercial deals between the two nations as a means of pump-priming their economies. (The 20- member delegation headed by Soviet Foreign Trade Minister Nikolai Patolichev was scheduled to arrive in New York! Feb. 24, and, go
directly to Washington for a meeting of the Soviet- American Trade Council on Feb. 26. Afterwards each member will be ac¬ companied to a specific community by his American business host.) The ex¬ pulsion and visit, seemingly
• (CONTINUED ON. PAGE », •, , .
iA